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Title: Beyond primacy Author: Alan Carter Date: 2010 Language: en Topics: Marxism, Green, Green Anarchism Source: *Environmental Politics*, Volume 19, 2010 â Issue 6. DOI: 10.1080/09644016.2010.518683
The most sophisticated philosophical defence of Marxâs theory of
historyâ G.A. Cohenâsâdeploys functional explanations in a manner that
accords explanatory primacy to technological development. In contrast,
an anarchist theory can be developed that accords explanatory primacy to
the state. It is, however, possible to develop a theory of history that
accords explanatory primacy neither to the development of technology nor
to the state but which nevertheless possesses the explanatory powerof
both the Marxist and the anarchist theories. Such a theory can also
provide the foundations for a radical environmentalist political theory.
Environmentalists can be found right across the political spectrum (see
Dryzek 1997). Not surprisingly, the most politically radical
environmentalists have tended to adhere to some form of either
eco-Marxism (for example, OâConnor 1998) or eco-anarchism (for example,
Bookchin 1982). Here, I explore both Marxist and anarchist theory as a
prelude to providing a glimpse of a genuine, radical environmentalist
theory. I begin by outlining G.A. Cohenâs defence of Karl Marxâs theory
of history. I then indicate how an anarchist theory can be developed
that builds upon elements drawn from Cohenâs defence of Marx, while
nevertheless standing in contraposition to Cohenâs theory. I then show
how elements of both these approaches can be combined within a theory
that transcends both Marxist and anarchist theories. Finally, I show how
such a general theory can provide the basis for an environmentalist
political theory with truly radical implications.
In numerous places, Marx appears to subscribe to a form of technological
determinism (for example, Marx 2000b, pp. 209â211, Marx, 2000k, p. 281,
Marx and Engels 2000a, pp. 177â178, and, especially, Marx 2000d, p.
425), which is, perhaps, most succinctly expressed in his dictum that
â[t]he hand-mill gives you society with the feudal lord; the steam-mill
society with the industrial capitalistâ (Marx 2000h, pp. 219â220). In a
nutshell, Marx appears to hold that the development of the forces of
productionâprincipally the technology that is employed in the production
of a societyâs means of subsistence, along with the labour-power that is
required to operate that technologyâexplains the relations of production
that obtain within a society, and he further appears to hold that the
relations of production explain (what he calls) the âsuperstructureâ of
legal and political relations that also obtain within a society.
Elsewhere, however, Marx seems to hold that competition between
capitalists forces them to introduce new technologies (for example, Marx
and Engels 2000b, p. 248). In which case, the relations of production
that obtain within a society would appear to be what explains the
development of its forces of production, and this seems, prima facie at
least, to contradict technological determinism.
Can this seeming contradiction be avoided? G.A. Cohen has argued that it
can, so long as one invokes functional explanations (Cohen 1978).[1] For
the claim that the development of the forces of production possesses
explanatory primacy with respect to the nature of the relations of
production can be reconciled with the claim that the relations of
production exert a causal influence on the development of the forces of
production by arguing that the development of the forces of production
in a given society âselectsâ relations of production within that society
that are functional for developing its forces of production. Here, the
development of the forces of production enjoys explanatory primacy
(because it is the development of the forces of production that does the
âselectingâ), while the causal influence of the relations of production
on the development of the forces of production is not merely
acknowledged but is actively employed within this particular form of
explanation; for it is precisely because of their effect on the
development of the forces of production that the latter selects those
particular relations of production. And when different relations of
production would be more functional for the development of the
productive forces, those new relations come to be selected. Thus, on
Cohenâs account, revolutionary transformations of society occur when the
relations of production become, in some sense, dysfunctional for the
further development of the forces of production (see Carter 1998).
Moreover, Cohen views the relationship between the relations of
production and the superstructure of legal and political
institutionsâprincipally the stateâalso as best construed in terms of a
functional explanation. On Cohenâs account, relations of production
âselectâ a superstructure of legal and political institutions that is
suited to stabilising those relations of production. In short, the
superstructure of legal and political institutions is âselectedâ because
it is functional for the relations of production. Thus, in a
structurally similar manner to his account of the relationship between
the forces and relations of production, Cohen argues that the relations
of production âselectâ a superstructure of legal and political
institutions because of the latterâs effect on those relations of
production. And a revolution that brings in new relations of production,
because the old ones have become dysfunctional for the development of
the forces of production, will involve overthrowing the prevailing
superstructure of legal and political institutions, for that
superstructure is especially suited to preserving the old relations of
production.
Cohenâs defence of Marxâs theory of history is thus grounded on a
bi-directional theoretical model. The bottom level of the model, as it
were, explains the level above it, which in turn affects the level below
it. To be precise, the development of the forces of production (the
development of the economic forces, in other words) explains the
relations of production (the economic relations), and the relations of
production affect the development of the forces of production. (For
example, because capitalist economic relations develop the productive
forces faster than do feudal economic relations, the former came to
replace the latter.) Moreover, the middle level of the model, as it
were, explains the top level, which in turn affects the level below it.
To be precise, the relations of production explain the superstructure of
legal and political institutions (which are, clearly, political
relations), and the superstructure affects the relations of production.
(For example, feudal economic relations supposedly select an absolute
monarchy, which is conducive to stabilising feudal economic relations;
while âbourgeoisâ economic relations supposedly select a modern
representative state, which is, ostensibly, especially conducive to
stabilising bourgeois economic relations.) But crucially, this is not
simply a bi-directional model. It is what we might think of as a
weighted one, for one direction of explanation possesses explanatory
primacy: the upward direction of explanation is, as it were, primary,
while the downward direction of explanation is, as it were, secondary (
Figure 1).
[Figure 1. Cohenâs technological-primacy model.]
One obvious problem with a weighted bi-directional model is that it may
get the weighting the wrong way round. Perhaps what the model takes to
be primary is actually secondary, and what it takes to be secondary is,
in actual fact, primary. Indeed, it could be argued that this is what
lies behind the opposition between Marxist and anarchist theories of the
relationship between the state and the economic structure of society.
For consider how Frederick Engels (1989, pp. 306â307) characterises the
dispute between Marx and his major anarchist opponent, Mikhail Bakunin:
While the great mass of the Social Democratic workers hold our view that
state power is nothing more than the organization with which the ruling
classesâlandowners and capitalistsâhave provided themselves in order to
protect their social privileges, Bakunin maintains that the state has
created capital, that the capitalist has his capital only by the grace
of the state. And since the state is the chief evil, the state above all
must be abolished; then capital will go to hell of itself. We, on the
contrary, say: abolish capital, the appropriation of all the means of
production by the few, and the state will fall of itself. The difference
is an essential one ⊠[2]
Crucially, Marxâs theoretical approach generates a significant political
implication: if one correctly sorts out the economic structure of
society, then political problems will disappear. For, according to Marx,
political power is class power (see Marx and Engels 2000b, p. 262).
Hence, political power must disappear when classes disappear. So it is
not surprising that he should insist that âthe economical subjection of
the man of labour to the monopolizer of the means of labour, that is,
the sources of life, lies at the bottom of servitude in all its forms,
of all social misery, mental degradation, and political dependence ⊠â
(Marx 1974, p. 82). Thus Marx concludes that all major social and
political problems will vanish once economic subjection has been removed
by means of a revolution.
But it is precisely this conclusion that anarchists have traditionally
rejected. In Bakuninâs view, for example, centralised, authoritarian
revolutionary means will inevitably lead to a centralised, authoritarian
post-revolutionary state, which is surely not implausible if the chosen
revolutionary means include the creation of coercive political
structures that will, on the morrow of the revolution, remain in place.
Hence, as Engels acknowledges, Bakuninâs fear that authoritarian
revolutionary means will produce an authoritarian, post-revolutionary
outcome has significant implications for his views regarding the
organisation of the International Workingmenâs Association: in short,
because âthe International ⊠was not formed for political struggle but
in order that it might at once replace the old machinery of the state
when social liquidation occurs, it follows that it must come as near as
possible to the Bakuninist ideal of future societyâ (Engels 1989, p.
307).
Moreover, Bakunin (1973, pp. 281â282) appears to agree that his dispute
with Marx is roughly as Engels depicts it:
To support his programme for the conquest of political power, Marx has a
very special theory, which is but the logical consequence of [his] whole
system. He holds that the political condition of each country is always
the product and the faithful expression of its economic situation; to
change the former it is necessary only to transform the latter. Therein
lies the whole secret of historical evolution according to Marx. He
takes no account of other factors in history, such as theever-present
reaction of political, juridical, and religious institutions on the
economic situation. He says: âPoverty produces political slavery, the
State.â But hedoes not allow this expression to be turned around, to
say: âPolitical slavery, the State, reproduces in its turn, and
maintains poverty as a condition for its own existence; so that to
destroy poverty, it is necessary to destroy the State!â And strangely
enough, Marx, who forbids his disciples to consider political slavery,
the State, as a real cause of poverty, commands his disciples in the
Social Democratic party to consider the conquest of political power as
the absolutely necessary preliminary condition for economic
emancipation.
Bakunin is certainly unfair in caricaturing Marx as taking no account of
political effects on the economic sphere; but this notwithstanding, it
seems uncontroversial that Marx lays the greater explanatory weight on
the economic, while Bakunin lays it on the political.
In summary, then, because Marx assumes that political power is premised
upon inegalitarian relations of production, he concludes that political
power will disappear once the appropriate relations of production are
introduced. Consequently, because of Marxâs theory regarding the
relationship of the state to the economic structure of society, Marx
simply dismisses Bakuninâs fears regarding political centralisation
within the International. Moreover, Cohenâs weighted bi-directional
model is wholly consistent with the assumption shared by both Marx and
Engels that political power will disappear in communism. For while
inegalitarian economic relations, which manifest class conflict, seem to
require a coercive state apparatus to stabilise them, non-conflictual
egalitarian economic relations might be thought to lack any such
requirement. Thus, it might be presumed, no coercive state will be
selected by egalitarian economic relations.
But there are grounds for thinking that there is a fundamental flaw in
Marxâs assumption that the state will necessarily vanish in a communist
society. From some of his earliest writings onwards (see, especially,
Marx 2000a,c), Marx locates the explanation of the state in divisions
within civil society. Rights to private property split civil society
into discrete persons who, in becoming economically individualised, seem
to require a state above them to secure the public interest. But once
the state sees to the public interest, individuals within civil society
are free to pursue their own private interests, within the bounds of the
law legislated and enforced by the state, without regard for other
personsâthus strengthening the need for a state above them to secure the
public interest. The result is a re-enforcing spiral whereby
individualism and egoism at the level of civil society require a seeming
community at the level of the state, which, in turn, exacerbates that
individualism and egoism at the level of civil society (see âThesis IVâ
in Marx 2000i, p. 172; also see Marx 2000c, p. 53 and Marx 2000j, pp.
71â72).[3]
Later, Marx focuses in particular on the fact that someâthe
bourgeoisieâown the means of production while othersâthe proletariatâown
only their ability to labour. Thus property rights divide society into
two major classes (see Marx and Engels 2000b, pp. 246â255), who stand
opposed to each other because of their conflicting interests as a result
of their differential ownership. This particular fracturing of society
along class lines is then taken by Marx to be the explanation of the
modern representative state, which, he claims, stands in a special
relation to one of those classes (see Marx and Engels 2000b, p.247)â
what he terms âthe ruling class.â Later still, Marx devotes more
attention to the complex relationship between classes and the state, and
between their various sub-groupings (see Marx 2000f, 2000g), but
throughout his writings there runs a common theme regarding the modern
state: it arises because of fracturing at the economic level. Moreover,
Marx never doubts that this entails that the removal of that fracturing
by the establishment of a classless society will inevitably lead to the
disappearance of the state.[4]
But that the state has arisen due to fracturing at the economic level,
even if this were uncontroversially true,[5] does not allow one simply
to conclude that removing those fractures entails the disappearance of
the state. To see this, distinguish, on the one hand, between necessary
and sufficient conditions and, on the other, between originating
conditionsâthose conditions that are eithernecessary or sufficient for a
state of affairs to ariseâand perpetuating conditionsâthose conditions
that are either necessary or sufficient for a state of affairs to
continue. If fracturing within civil society is the explanation for how
it is that the modern state has arisen, then fracturing within civil
society may well only constitute a sufficient originating condition. But
for the removal of fracturing within civil society to entail the
disappearance of the state, fracturing within civil society would have
to be a necessary perpetuating condition of the state. Consider a
tumour: A toxin might cause a tumour to start developing, but later
removal of that toxin might well lead neither to the tumourâs ceasing to
grow nor to its disappearance. Similarly, the modern representative
state might possibly have arisen due to fracturing within civil society.
But even if this were so, the removal of that fracturing might well not
lead to the stateâs disappearanceâjust as the removal of the toxin would
not suffice as a cure for the tumour it had caused. And one reason why
the removal of fractures within civil society might not lead to the
stateâs disappearance is that once an authoritarian state had arisen,
even if its rise were due to fracturing within civil society, such a
state might have the power to tax those within civil society to such an
extent that it could pay for a large enough police force and standing
army to keep it in power even once that fracturing within civil society
had been removed.
Perhaps, then, we should not be too quick to reduce political power to
economic power. And if we refrain from such a reduction, then the
anarchist critique of Marxist political strategy is not so easily
dismissed as Engels had presumed. And interestingly, Bakuninâs approach
might be thought to be supported to some degree by a weighted
bi-directional explanatory model that reverses the weighting found in
Cohenâs Marxist model; for recall that Bakunin (1973, p. 282) moots the
suggestion that âthe State ⊠maintains poverty as a condition for its
own existence; so that to destroy poverty, it is necessary to destroy
the Stateââwhich certainly sounds like a functional explanation.
So, let us see how an anarchist might deploy a complex functional
explanation to cast doubt on the Marxist conclusion that if
revolutionaries were to âabolish capital, the appropriation of all the
means of production by the few,â then âthe state will fall of itselfâ
(Engels 1989, p. 307). To do so, we must first isolate an additional
element to those clarified by Cohen. In identifying economic forces (the
forces of production), economic relations (the relations of production)
and political relations (the structure of legal and political
institutions), Cohen, in effect, distinguishes between forces and
relations, on the one hand, and between the economic and the political,
on the other. But this pair of distinctions allows a fourth category to
be identified: namely, political forces.
What might constitute the political forces of a modern society? Cohen
(1978, p. 32) argues that the forces of production include the means of
production (that is, tools, machines, premises, raw materials, etc.) and
labour-power (that is, the strength, skill, knowledge, etc. of the
producing agents). If the forces of production are the principal
economic forces at play within a society, then we might suspect that the
principal political forces presently at play within any of todayâs
societies are its forces of coercion. If so, then it is not simply
labour-power that industrial workers sell; rather it is economic
labour-power, for military personnel and the police sell their capacity
to labour, too. But it seems inappropriate to characterise the capacity
to labour offered by soldiers and the police as an economic force, given
that the work soldiers perform is potentially more destructive than
productive. Hence, it seems that we should distinguish between economic
and political labour-power. And we might therefore regard the forces of
coercion as including political labour-power (that is, the strength,
skill, knowledge, etc. of the coercive agents) and the means of coercion
(that is, the tools, machines, premises, etc. that are deployed in order
to maintain political control).[6]
How might these four elementsâthe economic forces (the forces of
production), the economic relations (the relations of production), the
political relations (the structure of legal and political institutions)
and the political forces (the forces of coercion and/or defence)âbe
plausibly situated within a weighted, bi-directional, explanatory model?
Given the need that states have to develop their military capacity in
order to remain militarily competitive with other, potentially
threatening, states,[7] they need to develop the productive capacity
that allows the development of their military capacity. But in order to
develop their productive capacity, they need economic relations that are
able to drive, rather than inhibit, that development. Hence, it can be
argued that the political relations (the structure of legal and
political institutions) select and stabilise economic relations (the
relations of production) that are conducive to developing the economic
forces (the forces of production) that facilitate the development of the
political forces (the forces of coercion and/or defence), because the
development of the political forces empowers those political relations.
In short, it can be argued that political relations select and stabilise
economic relations that are functional for them ( Figure 2).
[Figure 2. A state-primacy model.]
Interestingly, an anarchist model of this general type possesses no less
explanatory power than Cohenâs Marxist model. For just as with the
Marxist model, it claims that when economic relations fail to develop
the productive forces sufficiently, they will be replaced.[8] And just
as the Marxist model can explain the development of the productive
forces, so, too, can this particular anarchist model. However, it might
be thought that the Marxist model explains the relatively laissez-faire
nature of the liberal state, while an anarchist model of this type
cannot. But such an anarchist model allows one to claim that the state
can choose to remain in the background when capitalist economic
relations are being stabilised because, due to their seemingly
voluntary, contractual nature, their stabilisation requires less overt
force than previous economic relations required. So this particular
anarchist model is, in fact, at no disadvantage with respect to
accounting for the ostensibly liberal nature of the state in capitalist
societies.[9] But unlike Cohenâs Marxist model, such an anarchist model
also allows one to understand how it is that certain economically
unprofitable technologies, such as nuclear power, might come to be
developed. Civil nuclear power programmes are required for the
development of nuclear weapons, which are functional for the state
insofar as they allow it to defend itself. But the development of such
unprofitable technologies appears to make little, if any, sense on the
Marxist model. Indeed, once it is realised that the state, directly or
indirectly, selects the development of kinds of technology that are
functional for preserving the power of the state, the core Marxist
assumption that capitalism will develop the technology required for a
communist society becomes highly implausible (see Carter 1988, passim).
What is especially important, however, is that the complex functional
explanation at the heart of this anarchist model does not support the
Marxist conclusion that if revolutionaries were to transform the
economic relations, then âthe state will fall of itselfâ; for if
egalitarian relations of production proved not to be functional for the
state, then it would replace them with relations of production that
were.[10] Thus, it is in a revolution aiming to bring in communism that
this anarchist theory, which accords explanatory primacy to the state,
can be tested against the Marxist theory, which instead accords
explanatory primacy to the development of the productive forces, and
explanatory priority to the relations of production over the structure
of legal and political institutions.
Ironically, the revolution that is widely (if, perhaps, mistakenly)
viewed as archetypically Marxist is the Russian Revolution that began in
1917. During the course of that revolution, the workers set up factory
committees to run industry. But egalitarian economic relations did not
lead to the withering away of the state, as Engels (1976, p. 363) had
predicted. Instead, the factory committees were replaced by highly
inegalitarian, âone-manâ management. And how did Lenin justify this
authoritarian imposition upon the workers? As he wrote within a year of
coming to power: âAll our efforts must be exerted to the utmost to âŠ
bring about an economic revival, without which a real increase in our
countryâs defence potential is inconceivableâ (Lenin 1970, p. 6). In
other words, perhaps fearing that workersâ control would be less
productive, the Marxist state imposed inegalitarian economic relations
that were functional, in offering the prospect of greater productivity,
for the stateâs military requirements.
This seems to provide a clear corroboration for an anarchist
state-primacy theory, which claims that political relations choose
economic relations that are conducive to developing the economic forces,
which facilitate the development of the political forces, for the
development of the political forces maintains the empowerment of those
political relations. But it also seems, simultaneously, to falsify the
Marxist technological-primacy theory. And such an anarchist, weighted
bi-directional, explanatory model, as apparently corroborated by the
Russian Revolution, would provide theoretical justification for the
anarchist objection that, even if revolutionaries were to âabolish
capital,â it cannot simply be presumed that âthe state will fall of
itself.â
But is a theory that accords explanatory primacy to the state necessary
for upholding this principal anarchist objection to Marxist
revolutionary praxis? I shall argue that it is not. For as long as the
state is able to replace egalitarian economic relations with
inegalitarian ones, even if it is the case that the political relations
lack overall explanatory primacy, the Marxist contention that âthe state
will fall of itselfâ if revolutionaries were to abolish capital remains
mistaken.
To see this, let us consider a complex of functional explanations that
would support the anarchist objection, and which is also seemingly
corroborated by the Russian Revolution that began in 1917, but which
does not accord explanatory primacy to the state. Now, it may indeed be
the case that the political relations (the structure of legal and
political institutions) stabilise economic relations (the relations of
production) that are conducive to developing the economic forces (the
forces of production), which facilitate the development of the political
forces (the forces of coercion and/or defence), because the development
of the political forces is necessary for maintaining the empowerment of
the political relations (as in Figure 2). But it may also be the case
that the economic relations in part develop the economic forces, which
facilitate the development of the political forces that empower the
political relations, because, as those political relations are required
to stabilise those economic relations, this is functional for the
economic relations ( Figure 3). And it may also be the case that the
development of the economic forces facilitates the development of the
political forces, which, in turn, empowers the political relations which
stabilise the economic relations, in part because that is functional for
the development of the economic forces ( Figure 4). And it may also be
the case that the political forces empower the political relations which
stabilise the economic relations that develop the economic forces,
because, with the latterâs facilitating the development of the political
forces, the empowerment of the political relations is functional for the
development of those political forces ( Figure 5).
[Figure 3. A model focusing upon the explanatory role of the economic
relations.]
[Figure 4. A model focusing upon the explanatory role of the economic
forces.]
[Figure 5. A model focusing upon the explanatory role of the political
forces.]
If all of these functional explanations are combined, then what we have,
in effect, is represented by Figure 6, where each element of the model
âactsâ or âbehavesâ as it does because that âactionâ or âbehaviourâ is
functional for the element in question.
[Figure 6. A multiplex model.]
On this complex of functional explanations, there is no explanatory
primacy; hence it is not, as it stands, a weighted explanatory model.
But one could accord different weightings to each of the component
functional explanations. Nevertheless, on a basic non-weighted model
combining these four functional explanations, it remains the case that
the state can select inegalitarian economic relations should egalitarian
economic relations arise, and this seems sufficient to reject the
Marxist assumption that egalitarian economic relations will inevitably
lead to the withering away of the state. Indeed, were the economic
relations the only element to be transformed by revolutionary action,
then those relations, while having some power to transform the economic
forces, would fail to obtain support from either the political relations
or the political forces if it was not functional for the political
relations or for the political forces to stabilise those new economic
relations. But because the political relations are consistent with the
prevailing political forces, which are themselves consistent with the
prevailing economic forces, then the political relations would enjoy
support from the political forces, which themselves would enjoy support
from the economic forces. In which case, we might expect the political
relations to be far more capable of replacing the transformed economic
relations with ones more suited to the interests of those political
relations than the economic relations would be of effecting a permanent,
radical transformation of the economic forces (never mind of the whole
system).
Consequently, even without the particular anarchist model discussed
earlier, which accords explanatory primacy to the state, the principal
anarchist objection to Marxist strategy can still be upheld. Call the
new model presented here âa multiple functional explanatory modelâ or âa
multiplex model,â for short.[11] A model of this kind is all that an
anarchist needs to reject Marxist revolutionary praxis. Moreover,
Leninâs replacement of workersâ factory committees with âone-manâ
management serves as seeming corroboration both for a state-primacy
model and for such a multiplex model.
Now, while an anarchist state-primacy model is capable of grounding a
genuinely radical, green political theory,[12] the multiplex model
sketched above can equally provide such a grounding. In order for it to
do so, all that is required is a particular spelling out of the current
form of the political relations, the economic relations, the economic
forces and the political forces. For what if the political relations
actually comprise pseudo-representative, quasi-democratic,[13]
centralised, authoritarian power relations? And what if the economic
relations actually comprise competitive, inegalitarian, exploitative
production relations? And what if the economic forces actually include
highly resource-consumptive, environmentally damaging,
pollution-emitting technology? And what if the political forces actually
include nationalistic, militaristic armed forces wielding
technologically advanced, nuclear weaponry?
First, authoritarian power relations of this type would tend to
stabilise such production relations when they developed such
environmentally damaging technology (for example, nuclear power) in
order to supply their militaristic armed forces with nuclear weaponry
and to generate the surplus that would fund those armed forces, because
this is functional for such authoritarian power relations (given that
all this would be required to preserve them in a world containing
competing nuclear-armed states).
Second, such exploitative production relations would tend to develop
such environmentally damaging technology in order not only to enrich
those who exercise control within those relations but also to fund such
militaristic armed forces and supply them with their weaponry so that
they may preserve such authoritarian power relations, because this is
functional for those economic relations (given that all this is
necessary to stabilise them).
Third, the development of such environmentally damaging technology
generates the surplus that funds such militaristic armed forces, and
such technology (e.g. nuclear power) would also tend to supply them with
their weaponry so that they may preserve such authoritarian power
relations that empower such exploitative production relations, in part
because this is functional for the development of such environmentally
damaging technology.
Fourth, such militaristic armed forces, supplied with particular
weaponry, would tend to empower such authoritarian power relations which
stabilise such exploitative production relations that develop such
environmentally damaging, pollution-emitting technology, because this is
functional for those armed forces in generating the surplus that funds
them and in supplying them with their particular weaponry.[14]
If all of this is put together, as in Figure 7, then what emerges is
what we might label an environmentally hazardous dynamic.[15] Moreover,
each of the four component functional explanations reveals just how
difficult it would be to break free from such a dynamic, as we shall now
see.
[Figure 7. An environmentally hazardous dynamic.]
If one attempts merely to alter radically the economic relations (the
relations of production) in a direction that is not functional for the
political relations, then the political relations (the structure of
legal and political institutions) can be expected to introduce or
re-introduce economic relations that are more conducive to developing
the economic forces (the forces of production), which facilitate the
development of the political forces (the forces of coercion and/or
defence), because the development of the political forces maintains the
empowerment of the political relations (as in Figure 2).
But if one attempts, instead, merely to develop radically different
economic forcesâones that are not functional for the economic
relationsâthen the economic relations can be expected to introduce or
re-introduce economic forces which better facilitate the development of
the political forces that empower the political relations, because this
is functional for those economic relations (as in Figure 3).
Alternatively, if, instead, one attempts merely to develop radically
different political forcesâones that are not functional for the economic
forcesâthen the economic forces can be expected to facilitate the
introduction or re-introduction of political forces that empower the
political relations which stabilise the economic relations, because that
is functional for the development of those economic forces (as in Figure
4). For example, if a nation-state A feels threatened by the nuclear
weapons possessed by another state (say, B), then A is likely to develop
nuclear weapons itself if it has the civil nuclear power programme that
would make their development possible.[16] Indeed, should a competitor
state B have a civil nuclear power programme, but lack nuclear weapons
at this time, state Bâs civil nuclear programme, because it might result
in the development of nuclear weapons, would provide strong reason for
state A to develop nuclear weapons.
Finally, if one attempts, instead, merely to alter radically the
political relations in a direction that is not functional for the
political forces, then the political forces can be expected to introduce
or re-introduce political relations which stabilise the economic
relations that develop certain economic forces, because that is
functional for the development and maintenance of those political forces
(as in Figure 5).
Would this render all environmentally benign change impossible? No, but
it does indicate that, if we are within such an environmentally
hazardous dynamic, any effective solution to the environmental crisis
that we face would have to be radical, indeed. For it would seem that
the only way to stand a reasonable chance of preventing the functional
explanatory components of the dynamic from inhibiting the requisite
radical change would be to alter each and every one of them. This is
because any remaining element could be expected to attempt to replace a
second with one more functional for it, and that second element can be
expected in turn to attempt to replace a third with one more functional
for it, which can be expected in turn to attempt to replace the fourth
with one more functional for that third element. And this suggests that
green political theory, as surprising as this might initially seem,
would need to be more radical than even traditional Marxist or
traditional anarchist theory. Indeed, we might also suspect that
revolutions have thus far failed not because of how radical they were,
but, rather, because they were not radical enough.
Now, were pseudo-representative, quasi-democratic, centralised,
authoritarian power relations to be replaced by a decentralised,
consensual, discursive,[17] direct participatory democracy, and were
competitive, inegalitarian, exploitative production relations to be
replaced by self-sufficient or self-reliant, cooperative, egalitarian
production relations under workersâ and community control, and were
highly resource-consumptive, environmentally damaging,
pollution-emitting technology to be replaced by environmentally benign,
convivial, alternative technologies, and were nationalistic,
militaristic armed forces to be replaced by non-aggressive social
control and nonviolent forms of defence, then, instead of the
environmentally hazardous dynamic, we may find an environmentally benign
interrelationship[18] ( Figure 8).
[Figure 8. An environmentally benign interrelationship.]
Such an interrelationship might be expected to be environmentally
benign, because a participatory democracy of this kind would lack the
pressing need for nationalistic, militaristic armed forces, and hence
competitive, inegalitarian, exploitative production relations would not
be functional for such a participatory democracy. The reason for this is
that such exploitative production relations are required for highly
resource-consumptive, environmentally damaging, pollution-emitting
technology to be developed, and that technology is required for such
militaristic armed forces to develop further. But without the need for
such armed forces, neither they nor such environmentally damaging
technology nor such exploitative production relations are functional for
such a participatory democracy. (This is not, of course, to say that a
decentralised, consensual, discursive, direct participatory democracy is
sufficient for an environmentally benign social order. But it does
strongly suggest that it might well be necessary for one.)
Moreover, such egalitarian production relations under workersâ and
community control would have no need for pseudo-representative,
quasi-democratic, centralised, authoritarian power relations, and hence
highly resource-consumptive, environmentally damaging,
pollution-emitting technology would not be functional for those
egalitarian economic relations. Such environmentally damaging technology
is required for militaristic armed forces to develop further, and those
coercive forces are required to preserve such authoritarian power
relations. But without any need for those authoritarian power relations,
neither they nor such militaristic armed forces nor such environmentally
damaging technology would be functional for self-sufficient or
self-reliant, cooperative, egalitarian production relations under
workersâ and community control.
Furthermore, the preservation[19] of environmentally benign, convivial,
alternative technologies has no need of competitive, inegalitarian,
exploitativeproduction relations. Hence, it has no need for
nationalistic, militaristic armed forces or for the
pseudo-representative, quasi-democratic, centralised, authoritarian
power relations they preserve, which in turn stabilise such exploitative
production relations. Neither such exploitative production relations nor
such militaristic armed forces nor such authoritarian power relations
are functional for the preservation of environmentally benign,
convivial, alternative technologies.
In addition, non-aggressive social control and nonviolent forms of
defence have no need for the highly resource-consumptive,
environmentally damaging, pollution-emitting technology that is needed
for nationalistic, militaristic armed forces; hence non-aggressive
social control and nonviolent forms of defence have no need for
competitive, inegalitarian, exploitative production relations to sustain
and further develop such environmentally damaging technology.
Consequently, non-aggressive social control and nonviolent forms of
defence do not require pseudo-representative, quasi-democratic,
centralised, authoritarian power relations to stabilise such
exploitative production relations. Thus, neither such authoritarian
power relations nor such exploitative production relations nor such
environmentally damaging technology are functional for non-aggressive
social control and nonviolent forms of defence.
The fundamental problem is that if we have, in fact, succeeded in
identifying the core elements of any environmentally benign society,
then none of them would be selected by any element, or combination of
elements, within an environmentally hazardous dynamic. The multiplex
model mooted here does not, of course, presume that each element of any
such dynamic is inherently stable in the long run. For it would lead us
to expect the economic relations to change if, in facilitating greater
economic development, that would be functional for the other elements.
And it would also lead us to expect the economic forces to change if, in
being more productive, that would be functional for the rest of the
dynamic. Further, it would lead us to expect the political forces to
change if, in better empowering the political relations, that would be
functional for the other elements. And it would, moreover, lead us to
expect the political relations to change if that would be more conducive
to stabilising certain economic relations, and was, thereby, functional
for the rest of the dynamic. Tragically, because of what would be
functional for the majority of the dynamicâs component elements, epochal
transformations would, on this theory, be expected to consist in
developments of new forces and relations that constitute new forms of
authoritarian, centralised, inegalitarian and environmentally
destructive societies.[20]
This means that, if a multiplex theory of this general sort were
correct, and if we are presently situated within an environmentally
hazardous dynamic, then we should rather expect that dynamic to
accelerate than to shift into reverse. Every transformation motivated
within the prevailing order that we would have reason to anticipate
would take us in the wrong direction: namely, even further away from the
environmentally benign.
Previously, I have argued that a radical green political theory can be
grounded on a state-primacy model (see Carter 1993, pp. 40â45 and p. 56,
note 16). Because economistic thinking preponderates, it is not
surprising that a political theory with such a grounding should have
appeared wholly implausible to some.[21] However, as should now be
clear, a state-primacy theory is not, in fact, a necessary grounding for
the modelling of an environmentally hazardous dynamic; for we have seen
that a multiplex theory can equally ground it. Thus, because a
state-primacy model is unnecessary for grounding a radical green
political theory, such a theory is not dependent upon the acceptance of
any such model. Consequently, an opposition to state-primacy theory is
no reason for rejecting the radical green political theory sketched
here. Furthermore, if one doubts that the elements of the
environmentally hazardous dynamic obtain in todayâs world, then one
could accept a multiplex model without being committed to the radical
green political theory that it might otherwise be thought to ground.
This notwithstanding, many will recognise the elements of the
environmentally hazardous dynamic at play in todayâs world. And while
the above has merely constituted the briefest of adumbrations,[22]
hopefully it will suffice to show how a truly radical, green political
theory, when it is premised upon a complex of functional explanations,
can be seen to transcend both Marxist and anarchist political theory.
And it does so in a manner that, surprising as it might initially seem,
makes it more radical than both. To be precise, Marxist theory, in
focusing on inequalities of economic power, has often served to justify
the maintenance of inequalities in political power, at least during the
course of the revolution (see Carter 1999b; also see Carter 1994). It is
this aspect of Marxist revolutionary praxis that anarchists have most
opposed. But in focusing on the exercise of political power, some
self-styled anarchists have failed to analyse inequalities in economic
power adequately. The radical green political theory proffered here
justifies a fundamental opposition to the unequal exercise of both
economic and political power, for it enables one to see both economic
and political equality as essential prerequisites of an environmentally
benign social order.
But to sidestep several objections at once, it should be noted that I
have not claimed that all existing societies display all of the features
of the environmentally hazardous dynamic to the full. Nor have I claimed
that wecan simply move immediately to a fully environmentally benign
socialorder. Both are ideal types.[23] And the environmentally hazardous
dynamic could be thought to be instantiated in different places to
different degrees. If so, the key political, economic, technological and
social challenge would be to move progressively from the more hazardous
to the more benign.
But would such a move even be possible, never mind likely? One thing is
clear: if the above argument is roughly correct, then unless the
connections between the elements of the environmentally hazardous
dynamic are understood, ineffectual policies and counter-productive
political activities will remain preponderant, and they will only serve
to distract us from the real task ahead. And it is easy to see how such
policies and political activities should have become our staple diet.
For those dominant within the political relations have thus far
benefited from their roles, as have those working as political forces.
Those dominant within the economic relations have undoubtedly benefited.
And even those working as economic forces might feel that they have done
better than they would otherwise have done had a competing state
succeeded in conquering them. So, while it might not have been wholly
irrational for societies to have developed in accord with an
environmentally hazardous dynamic up until now, the times they are
rapidly a-changing. And while it might still be rational for elderly
people in dominant positions to conduct business as usual, and while
they might be unable to step outside of the old paradigms that constrain
their thinking, if we are presently located within an environmentally
hazardous dynamic, given the environmental crises before us, then it
would now be highly irrational for the vast majority of us to remain
entrapped there. But a precondition for escape would be to understand
that dynamicâs complex nature.
So, by way of conclusion, if we are entrapped within an environmentally
hazardous dynamic, and if, therefore, the only genuine, sustainable
alternative is the environmentally benign interrelationship, then if one
is to be an effective democrat, one also needs to be a decentralist, and
if one is to be an effective decentralist, one also needs to be an
egalitarian. Moreover, if one is to be an effective egalitarian, one
also needs to be a promoter of convivial, alternative technologies. In
addition, if one is to be an effective promoter of convivial,
alternative technologies, one also needs to be a pacifist. And if one is
to be an effective pacifist, one also needs to be an advocate of direct,
participatory, discursive democracy. In a word, if the above argument is
by and large correct, then whether one is a democrat, a decentralist, an
egalitarian, a promoter of alternative technology or a pacifist, one has
reason to strive for all of the components of the environmentally benign
interrelationship. Put another way, democracy, decentralisation,
equality, alternative technology and non-violence come packaged together
or not at all.
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[1] For a discussion of this form of explanation, see Carter (1992).
[2] This view of the state is not peculiar to Engels, for it echoes what
he and Marx hadjointly written over a quarter of a century earlier. See
Marx and Engels (2000a, p. 200).
[3] The division at one level leading to the need for unity at a higher
level directly mirrors Marxâs Feuerbachian analysis of religious
alienation, of course.
[4] For a critical analysis of Marxâs theory of the state, see Carter
(1988, ch. 5).
[5] As an explanation for the rise of the modern state, this might well
be doubted. For some might argue, instead, that modern states appear, in
many cases, to be more the result of (often far earlier) conquest.
[6] See Carter (2000).
[7] And, ordinarily, modern states do find themselves situated within an
international structure of competing states. See Skocpol (1979, pp.
30â32).
[8] And it finds support in Michael Taylorâs contention that it was
state actors who selected new economic relations in France from the
fifteenth century and in Russia from the eighteenth century. Moreover,
this was, argues Taylor, because of their need to obtain increased tax
revenue as a result of âgeopolitical-military competition.â See Taylor
(1989), especially, pp. 124â126 and 128â132. Also see Huntington (1968,
pp. 122 and 126). Even Marx agrees that the state âhelped to hastenâ
within France âthe decay of the feudal system.â See Marx (2000g, p.
345).
[9] Such an anarchist model is also at no disadvantage in explaining
underdevelopment in poor countries. And there is reason for thinking
that it provides a superior account to that provided by the Marxist
model. See Carter (1995).
[10] Clearly, the state needs subordinate classes to be kept at work in
order to produce the wealth it must tax if it is to pay its personnel.
See Skocpol (1979, p. 30). Hence, it can be argued that the state has
its own interest in maintaining exploitative economic relations, and
therefore it cannot simply be reduced to the instrument of a class.
Rather, state and bourgeois interests ordinarily contingently
correspond.
[11] In having four component functional explanatory elements, we might
call this âa quadruplex model.â However there is nothing, in principle,
preventing us from adding further components, such as a functional
explanation of ideology.
[12] For such an eco-anarchist theory, see Carter (1993, 1999a).
[13] For an indication of the extent to which the term âdemocracyâ has
been usurped by those opposed to genuine democracy, see Arblaster
(1987). Also see Graham (1986). For an indication of how undemocratic
and illegitimate are contemporary societies, see Singer (1973).
[14] Note that all this is neutral with respect to the debate between
explanatory collectivists and methodological individualists. On a
structuralist reading of the above four functional explanations, the
relations and forces would be construed as âmaking selections.â But on a
more methodological individualist reading, rational actors would be
construed as engaged in the selecting. Moreover, on either approach, it
is possible to tell a Darwinian story regarding which âselectionsâ
survive. For one possible Darwinian mechanism, see Carter (1999a,
§4.3.1.1).
[15] See Carter (1993).
[16] We would also expect two nuclear-armed states to pose such a threat
to each other that they will both be compulsively driven to do what is
necessary economically in order to remain militarily competitive.
[17] On discursive democracy and its appropriateness for
environmentalism, see Dryzek (1990, 1992).
[18] See Carter (1993). For classic discussions of decentralisation,
direct participatory democracy, convivial and alternative technologies,
and non-violence, see the references in ibid.
[19] âPreservationâ rather than âdevelopmentâ because the
environmentally benign interrelationship, once in place, could be
expected to constitute a relatively stationary order, not a dynamic en
route to oblivion.
[20] Such a complex of functional explanations should therefore not be
confused with structural functionalism. The latter is a theory focusing
upon why societies tend to remain unchanged, while Cohenâs theory, the
state-primacy theory, and the multiplex theory are each offered as an
explanation of epochal change from one set of production relations to
another.
[21] Though it is telling how little attention green liberal critics of
the state-primacy theory have paid to the role of the military and to
its highly distorting effects. Failing to examine in any detail military
requirements within ostensibly âliberal democracies,â whether existing
or imagined, is more like simply ignoring an argument rather than
answering it. See, for example, Barry (1999) and Hailwood (2004).
[22] Support for many of the claims made here, and answers to a number
of possible objections to those claims, can be found in Carter (1999a,
passim). Although the argument there rests on a state-primacy theory,
many of the rebuttals of objections to such a theory constitute equally
effective responses to objections to the multiplex theory sketched here.
[23] Although several pre-literate tribal peoples have displayed the
features of the environmentally benign interrelationship; and they also
managed to survive for a very long time compared to the short-lived,
self-destructive societies of our day.